Female workers still wear 'pink collar'

WASHINGTON — Women are more educated and employed at higher levels than ever before but remain largely confined to traditional "pink-collar" jobs, a study by the American Association of University Women finds.

The highest proportions of college-educated working women are in teaching and nursing. For college-educated men, neither occupation appears on their list of the 10 most common.

Overall, the most common occupations for women are secretaries, bookkeepers, sales supervisors, nurses, waitresses, receptionists and cooks, according to the study released Monday. It cited data from the Census Bureau.

Men share just two of the most common occupations: sales supervisors and cooks.

Women have achieved parity with men in obtaining four-year college degrees and are more likely to work in managerial and professional careers today than 20 years ago. But they are not sufficiently prepared to move into the better-paying, higher-status and fastest-growing occupations such as systems analysts, software designers and engineers, the study found.

It recommends more focus on advanced education for women in fields such as science, engineering and computers.

"The good news is that women have made great strides in education and the workforce," said Mary Ellen Smyth, president of the American Association of University Women's Educational Foundation. "The bad news is that the new high-tech economy is leaving women behind.

"It's not that women are hitting a glass ceiling in the high-tech sector. It's that they don't have the keys to open the door."

American women now graduate from high school at higher rates than men and have higher rates of college enrollment. Women also have higher rates of obtaining bachelor's degrees.

But that has not translated to the workforce.

Two-thirds of women are in the labor force, and their participation is expected to grow by 15 percent through 2010. Men's participation is projected to grow by about 9 percent.

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Who works where

The 10 most common jobs for adults in 2000, according to the Census Bureau.